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Lucan, Latin in full Marcus Annaeus Lucanus (born ad 39, Corduba [now Córdoba], Spain—died 65, Rome [Italy]), Roman poet and republican patriot whose historical epic, the Bellum civile, better known as the Pharsalia because of its vivid account of that battle, is remarkable as the single major Latin epic poem that eschewed the intervention of the gods.

Lucan was the nephew of the philosopher-statesman Lucius Annaeus Seneca (Seneca the Younger). Trained by the Stoic philosopher Cornutus and later educated in Athens, Lucan attracted the favourable attention of the emperor Nero owing to his early promise as a rhetorician and orator. Shortly, however, Nero became jealous of his ability as a poet and halted further public readings of his poetry. Already disenchanted by Nero’s tyranny and embittered by the ban on his recitations, Lucan became one of the leaders in the conspiracy of Piso (Gaius Calpurnius) to assassinate Nero. When the conspiracy was discovered, he was compelled to commit suicide by opening a vein. According to Tacitus, he died repeating a passage from one of his poems describing the death of a wounded soldier.

The Bellum civile, his only extant poem, is an account of the war between Julius Caesar and Pompey, carried down to the arrival of Caesar in Egypt after the murder of Pompey, when it stops abruptly in the middle of the 10th book. Lucan was not a great poet, but he was a great rhetorician and had remarkable political and historical insight, though he wrote the poem while still a young man. The work is naturally imitative of Virgil, though not as dramatic. Although the style and vocabulary are usually commonplace and the metre monotonous, the rhetoric is often lifted into real poetry by its energy and flashes of fire and appears at its best in the magnificent funeral speech of Cato on Pompey. Scattered through the poem are noble sayings and telling comments, expressed with vigour and directness. As the poem proceeds, the poet’s republicanism becomes more marked, no doubt because as Nero’s tyranny grew, along with Lucan’s hatred of him, he looked back with longing to the old Roman Republic. It has been said that Cato is the real hero of the epic, and certainly the best of Lucan’s own Stoicism appears in the noble courage of his Cato in continuing the hopeless struggle after Pompey had failed.

Lucan’s poetry was popular during the Middle Ages. Christopher Marlowe translated the first book of the Bellum civile (1600), and Samuel Johnson praised Nicholas Rowe’s translation (1718) as “one of the greatest productions of English poetry.” The English poets Robert Southey and Percy Bysshe Shelley in their earlier years preferred him to Virgil. His work strongly influenced Pierre Corneille and other French classical dramatists of the 17th century.

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